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The Genesis: Wetware and the Gutter
WWS was originally a ghost collective of ‘Fixers’—former corporate counter-intelligence agents, disgraced security consultants, and black-hat slicers. They were specialists in “wetware” (human assets) and “dryware” (system penetration), working jobs that were too sensitive or too dirty for the Big Corps to officially sanction. Their specialty was “cleanup,” neutralizing threats, retrieving proprietary tech, and disappearing targets in the vast, anonymous crowds of the lower sectors.
The founders realized that their greatest asset was not their skill, but their plausible deniability. They created the bland, clinical name, Wet Work Solutions, as a cynical joke—a name that sounds like a bio-engineering firm or a maintenance crew, ensuring they are utterly forgettable by all but the highest-level clients.
Section 187: The Untraceable Kill-Switch
The organization operates entirely outside of physical jurisdiction, communicating primarily through encrypted, constantly shifting networks—a ghost in the machine. Their contracts are rarely physical documents; they are data packets signed with blood oaths and crypto keys.
The internal code “Section 187” is reserved for the ultimate assignment: the removal of a high-value, highly protected individual (a “Node”). This designation doesn’t just mean a hit; it means the target, all associated data, and any evidence of their existence must be wiped clean from the system and the streets. It’s the equivalent of hitting the kill-switch on a valuable piece of corporate hardware—cold, surgical, and untraceable.
Wet Work Solutions is the ultimate vendor for the future: they sell silence, finality, and the quiet erasure of inconvenient truths for the mega-rich who rule the stars.
OPERATIONAL POLICIES MISSING ETA: TBD
OPERATIONAL POLICIES MISSING ETA: TBD
